Welcome to the home of The Question Evolution Project. Presenting information demonstrating that there is no truth in minerals-to-man evolution, and presenting evidence for special creation. —Established by Cowboy Bob Sorensen

Friday, October 11, 2013

Oil and Gas — Evidence for the Global Flood

Some of us know the Sinclair Oil company's dinosaur logo. The prevalent thinking at the time was that dinosaurs died and turned into oil, so you're putting a dead dinosaur into your fuel tank. Now we know that this idea is incomplete. In addition, we were told that it takes millions of years for oil to form. The truth is that it is conditions, not time, that cause the formation of oil and natural gas.

Huge amounts of oil reserves are trapped in oil shale. Research is being done to extract and use them. Since organic compounds degrade and cannot last for millions of years (even in shale), and since considerable amounts of marine algae and plankton have been turned into oil, these are two of the many indicators that oil deposits in oil shale and other places for a global Flood.

Oil resources are in the news nearly every day, with discussions on
both the pros and cons of oil “fracking.” Approximately 10 percent of
the world’s recoverable oil reserves are in shale-rich rocks that can
only be accessed by hydraulic fracturing (i.e., fracking). A
2013 study estimates there are about 345 billion barrels of recoverable
shale oil. These same shale-rich rocks also account for up to 32
percent of the world’s natural gas reserves. The amount of gas recoverable from shale is estimated at around 7,300 trillion cubic feet in volume.

When we stop to consider the early origins of these vast reserves of
oil and gas, it’s apparent that these fuel resources are not as “old” as
many secular scientists believe. But in order to understand the age of
oil, it’s important to start at its source.

Geologists have done many studies over the years, testing the oil
produced around the world for its chemical components. They have found
that most oil and gas is derived from shale-rich source rocks—rocks
abundant in organic debris trapped during deposition. The chemical
signatures of both oil and gas often match—much like fingerprints. Shale
is the most common sedimentary rock and can serve both as a “seal” and a
source rock for oil. Liquids and gases can only pass through shale
layers very slowly due to the low permeability of these clay-rich rocks,
which tightly seal the oil that seeps into and becomes trapped within
them. Hydraulic fracturing creates conduits that allow oil and gas to
leak out of these “tight” formations.